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Tuesday, 4 April 2017

BELIEVE NICK

Ex-MP sues forces and witness over VIP abuse claims

03 Apr 2017

Harvey Proctor: Claims he lost his home through Operation Midland

A former Tory MP accused of being a member of an alleged
murderous Westminster child sex abuse ring is reportedly taking legal
action against two police forces in the wake of the flawed Operation
Midland inquiry.

Harvey Proctor is suing the Metropolitan
Police Service (MPS) and Leicestershire Police as part of an estimated
£1 million damages claim for personal “losses” incurred.

The
former MP for both Billericay and Basildon, who left politics 30 years
ago after becoming embroiled in a sex workers’ scandal, is suing the man
who made the claims of his alleged involvement in a VIP parliamentary
sex ring.

Mr Proctor says he lost his job and his home over
Operation Midland, which was based on claims of an anonymous witness
known only as Nick.

Lawyers for the 70-year-old have given the MPS two weeks to reveal Nick’s full name and address.

He
is said to be seeking more than £500,000 from the MPS for the loss of
his home and job, and will be adding a further claim for exemplary
damages for suffering caused.

The claim against the
Leicestershire force is based on its actions with regard to Mr Proctor’s
personal life and his employment as the private secretary to the Duke
and Duchess of Rutland.

The MPS spent a reported £2.5 million and
almost 18 months investigating the claims before concluding there was
insufficient evidence to support a prosecution.

Lord Bramall,
former chief of the defence staff, who was also named by Nick, is
understood to have been offered a six-figure settlement by the MPS.

Nick
— who cannot be identified for legal reasons — is under investigation
by Northumbria Police for perverting the course of justice.

In a
separate development, the MPS waslast week said to be investigating
attacks aimed at Daniel Janner, the son of Lord Janner who was accused
of sex abuse before his death in 2015. Lord Janner was also named by
Nick.

Nails were driven into the tyre of a car outside Daniel
Janner’s home on two occasions. The same style of attack happened to a
close friend of the family.

“This is an obvious attempt to
intimidate us into agreeing a settlement with those taking action
against my father’s estate,” said Mr Janner, a leading QC. “It will not
work. These claims are false and we will not give in to them.”

In
December London Mayor Sadiq Khan was accused of a “completely
unacceptable” failure to respond to the “acute ethical issues” raised by
the sexual abuse allegations of the MPS inquiry.

Lord Carlile
QC, the former head of City Hall’s London Policing Ethics Panel, said
the failure of Operation Midland – which investigated allegations
against the former Home Secretary Leon Brittan and ex-Army chief Lord
Bramall among others – had exposed concerns about policing which
“clearly required action”.

He said the issues – which included
whether a complaint should be believed before an investigation had begun
– should have been addressed by the panel.

But he said that the
Mayor and his staff had instead been guilty of “inertia” and had
appeared “uninterested” in taking action. Lord Carlile’s criticisms
followed a decision by the Deputy Mayor for Policing, Sophie Linden, to
replace him as the head of the panel along with four other panel members
whose contracts expired at the last mayoral election in May 2016.

Lord
Carlile added that events had unfolded which clearly required work by
the policing ethics panel, a “striking example being the aftermath of
Operation Midland” and the acute ethical issues raised by Sir Richard
Henriques’ review last October.